DMG said:
depends on what mood I am in at the time I look at the negs, there could be nothing worth keeping at the initial review but months down the line the same roll could have a keeper on it or vice versa...never say never
Without starting a food fight about it (and I'm jumping the queue rather late here, without reading further in the thread), this is one of the things that keeps me (mostly) shooting film: it's there on the roll, and if I don't think too much of some of the frames there now, I might have a different take on it a week, month, year, decade from now. With digital, it's a bit hard to fight the temptation to instantly pitch something that doesn't offer the "instant wow" factor on that itty-bitty screen, especially if you find yourself running a bit short on card storage space at a critical moment.
As far a "percentages" go (didn't we go through this before, quite recently at that?), for me it truly depends on the day. Sometimes I can comes back with several rolls of largely decent stuff, with a handful of truly standout material; other times I come up craps, with just a few faintly interesting takes on a roll. But my shooting is a good deal more concentrated these days, and the "ratio" has steadily improved. Part of this, for me has been a result of running around with less "stuff" on my shoulder, and this is direct result of my sea-change in equipment choice, from a pair of SLRs and five-lens kit to a two-rangefinder, three-lens kit that weighs a fraction as much and fits in a bag half the size. There's less to fuss with, and the gear on hand does the job.
But, IMO, the
most important aspect of any camera-and-lens combination that you use is your comfort level with it: could you load a roll of film in it, and make your basic exposure adjustments to it, wearing a blindfold? (A seaoned pro, many years ago, challenged me to what he called the "Jedi test"...yes, this was some months after the first
Star Wars movie had hit the big screen; I failed miserably, but remembred that excercise well). Understanding the viewfinder well is part of the deal, particularly when moving from one camera type to another (as in SLR to RF). I've found the rangefinder to be liberating in a number of ways, but there's also a discipline involved when looking through that viewfinder – understanding framelines, understanding your lens' characteristics as much as possible (which would seem much easier with SLRs, but not necessarily), which brings us down to
seeing as well as looking. I'm not trying to do a slap-dash Photo 101 here, but it really is about getting the fundamentals down. And it needn't be pure drudgery, but it does take work.
- Barrett